Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene
Volume 102, Issue 10 , Pages 969-978, October 2008

Buruli ulcer (Mycobacterium ulcerans infection)

  • Douglas S. Walsh

      Affiliations

    • United States Army Medical Research Unit-Kenya (USAMRU-K), Walter Reed Project, PO Box 54, Kisumu, 10400, Kenya
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Tel.: +254 57 20 22942; fax: +254 57 20 22903.
  • ,
  • Françoise Portaels

      Affiliations

    • Mycobacteriology Unit, Department of Microbiology, Institute of Tropical Medicine, Antwerp, Belgium
  • ,
  • Wayne M. Meyers

      Affiliations

    • Department of Environmental and Infectious Disease Sciences, Armed Forces Institute of Pathology, Washington, DC, USA

Received 16 April 2008; received in revised form 5 June 2008; accepted 6 June 2008.

Summary 

Mycobacterium ulcerans is an emerging infection that causes indolent, necrotizing skin lesions known as Buruli ulcer (BU). Bone lesions may include reactive osteitis or osteomyelitis beneath skin lesions, or metastatic osteomyelitis from lymphohematogenous spread of M. ulcerans. Pathogenesis is related to a necrotizing and immunosuppressive toxin produced by M. ulcerans, called mycolactone. The incidence of BU is highest in children up to 15 years old, and is a major public health problem in endemic countries due to disabling scarring and destruction of bone. Most patients live in West Africa, but the disease has been confirmed in at least 30 countries. Treatment options for BU are antibiotics and surgery. BCG vaccination provides short-term protection against M. ulcerans infection and prevents osteomyelitis. HIV infection may increase risk for BU, and renders BU highly aggressive. Unlike leprosy and tuberculosis, BU is related to environmental factors and is thus considered non-communicable. The most plausible mode of transmission is by skin trauma at sites contaminated by M. ulcerans. The reemergence of BU around 1980 may be attributable to environmental factors such as deforestation, artificial topographic alterations and increased manual agriculture of wetlands. The first cultivation of M. ulcerans from nature was reported in 2008.

Keywords: Buruli ulcer, Mycobacterium ulcerans, Mycobacteria, Infection, Emerging diseases, Review

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PII: S0035-9203(08)00265-4

doi:10.1016/j.trstmh.2008.06.006

Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene
Volume 102, Issue 10 , Pages 969-978, October 2008